Berlin: Symphony of a Great City
Video Item Preview
Share or Embed This Item
movies
Berlin: Symphony of a Great City
A classic silent film dedicated to Berlin shot in 1927 by Walter Ruttmann. See http://imdb.com/title/tt0017668/ for further details.
- Addeddate
- 2006-02-19 18:45:05
- Format
- MovingImage
- Identifier
- BerlinSymphonyofaGreatCity
comment
Reviews
Reviewer:
chinoix
-
favoritefavoritefavoritefavoritefavorite -
May 3, 2013
Subject: Una joya
Subject: Una joya
Esta película es una joya cinematográfica. Una clase magistral de narrativa visual desbordante de expresividad ademas de un documento invaluable del Berlin de los años veinte.
Reviewer:
dudeyberlin
-
favoritefavoritefavoritefavoritefavorite -
June 10, 2010
Subject: Berlin
Subject: Berlin
Es ist meine Stadt Berlin, so wie ich sie NICHT mehr kennengelernt habe!!! Ein wunderbares Dokument.........
Reviewer:
picfixer
-
favoritefavoritefavoritefavorite -
February 8, 2010
Subject: Experimental city portrait
Subject: Experimental city portrait
Germany had just emerged from the worse aftereffects of World War I. The Great Depression that was to throw everything into chaos was still over the horizon, and Hitler was little more than a provincial rabble rouser who collected more ridicule than followers. This is the setting in which we view Berlin - Germany’s most cosmopolitan and liberal metropolis. From dawn to midnight the workday of a great city unfolds in silent motion. Among the images of modern life we see Tom Mix’s name on a movie marquee and a brief clip of Chaplin’s feet, which indicated Berlin’s openness to the world. Watching these cultured people, these progressive people, going about their ordinary affairs, it is impossible to forget that in less than five years many of them would willingly throw themselves into the abyss. FOOTNOTE: Around this time, by sheer coincidence, another great European capitol was filmed during its brief moment of sunshine - pre-Stalinist Moscow. Dziga Vertov’s excellent “Man With the Movie Camera” also documents metropolitan life and also is available here at the Archive. Watching them now, knowing of these cities' intertwined horrific destinies, the parallels between the two films become more than a little eerie.
Reviewer:
Mozarteus
-
February 7, 2010
Subject: oh sweet youthful arrogance
Subject: oh sweet youthful arrogance
doowopbob, do you have a cam?
So where is the Symphony II?
The world is waiting in awe!:)
So where is the Symphony II?
The world is waiting in awe!:)
Reviewer:
doowopbob
-
February 7, 2010
Subject: Classic..?.....ROFLMAO..!...
Subject: Classic..?.....ROFLMAO..!...
This Is A Gee-Willikeers, Got A Camera For My Birthday And Ran All Over Town Shooting Art Deco El Garbago Thinking Im Fritz Lang..!
Reviewer:
ynzxc
-
favoritefavoritefavoritefavoritefavorite -
November 3, 2009
Subject: download
Subject: download
very good film i want tu download
Reviewer:
fatal sword
-
favoritefavoritefavoritefavorite -
September 22, 2009
Subject: Help with Berlin Symphoney of a great City.
Subject: Help with Berlin Symphoney of a great City.
Hi
does anybody know my mac wii not read the file ,when you download Berlin Symphoney of a great city.
Fatel Sword
does anybody know my mac wii not read the file ,when you download Berlin Symphoney of a great city.
Fatel Sword
Reviewer:
Hg80
-
favoritefavoritefavorite -
September 9, 2009
Subject: Allan James Thomas's essay
Subject: Allan James Thomas's essay
Wickson:
You may be interested in Allan James Thomas's 2000 essay.
Berlin: Symphony of a City
by
Allan James Thomas
Berlin: Symphony of a City (Berlin: die Sinfonie der Großstadt)
(1927, Germany, 50 mins, B&W, silent)
How to watch a film like Berlin: Symphony of a City, seventy-three years after it was made? The obvious temptation is to view it as an historical document, an insight into the patterns of life and living in Berlin in the late '20s - certainly the film lends itself to such a viewing. It offers us a literal 'day in the life of', bringing us into Berlin by train as the sun rises, and following the life of the city as it wakes, goes to work through the morning and into the afternoon, moves from work to play, to sport and dancing and drinking deep into the night. It leaps swiftly from rich to poor, from man to machine and back again, from the grandeur of the city-scape to the sewers beneath, and always movement, movement in every way that can be found. Trains, trams, horses, bustling crowds, spinning wheels and fairground rides, boat races, horse races, dog races, dancing and pounding machines, always we see the dynamism of a city in motion. It is an extraordinarily beautiful film, and its distance from us in time and in experience only emphasises that beauty. Like a carved miniature, it offers us a model of Berlin brought close and intimate, and yet viewed from across an unbridgeable gap.
At least part of this gap is a consequence of the sheer aestheticism of the film itself; we see its beauty before we see anything else. Documentary makers from John Grierson to Jean Rouch and beyond have warned of the dangers of the beautiful image within documentary film. In an article written in the mid '30s (1), Grierson picks out Berlin in particular as an example of what documentary should not be. Despite the beauty and power of its images, and the dynamism of its editing (which he acknowledges), for Grierson, Berlin ultimately fails to show us anything of any import:
For all its ado of workmen and factories and swirl and swing of a great city, Berlin created nothing. Or if it created something, it was that shower of rain in the afternoon(2). The people of the city got up splendidly, they tumbled through their five million hoops impressively, they turned in; and no other issue of God or man emerged than that sudden besmattering spilling of wet on people and pavements.(3)
In its emphasis on the beautiful and the visually dramatic to the exclusion of any 'issue' as such (unemployment for instance), the film, for Grierson at least, shirks its social responsibilities; we come out no better informed or educated than we were before.
Is this a fair critique of the film? Certainly there would seem to be at least the seeds of political analysis at work in Berlin, in its constant juxtaposition of the everyday life of the worker and that of the wealthy elite. It's certainly tempting to read such comparisons as illustrations of the unfair consequences of an unequal distribution of wealth. In some cases the contrasts and analogies drawn through editing resemble something one might see in a film by Eisenstein or Vertov; for example, a series of shots of rich and poor at their respective lunches are interspersed with shots of lions tearing up a leg of raw meat. One could easily imagine an Eisenstein forming a metaphorical juxtaposition with these shots suggesting that the rich devour the poor like ravenous lions.
However, although the linking of the scenes does seem to suggest that an analogy or metaphor is being drawn, it is ambiguous whether it is the poor or the rich who are being compared to a ravenous lion. Indeed, it seems that if there is a point being made, it is that rich and poor are all the same in their primal needs and desires. What it shows us is not the contrast between the conditions of rich and poor, but their basic similarity. For all of the juxtapositions of rich and poor and their respective lifestyles we find in Berlin, the ultimate effect is not to oppose the two in a dialectic of class struggle, but to suggest their ultimate unity as differentiated parts unified by their common membership of the same organic whole, that is to say, Berlin itself (4). One cannot agree with Grierson when he argues that Berlin shows us nothing, that it is purely an aesthetic experience; it offers us a dynamic expression of the city in motion, the interaction of its parts as they make up the whole that is Berlin.
The problem is that the Berlin if offers us is a profoundly ahistorical one; by subsuming any conflict between its opposing elements to their ultimate unity as part of the whole, it suggests that ultimately there can be no change. The parts that make it up can come and go, but Berlin will always be Berlin. If, from where we are now, we can view it 'historically', it is not because it offers us a snapshot of a time passed; it offers us no more than a false unity, forged by the subsumption of difference (class, race, religion, politics) to the apparent unity of the whole. Like the carved miniature I evoked earlier, it holds us at a distance, the better to appreciate it's intricate beauty. If we see 'history' in the film, viewing it seventy-three years later, it is because we see in that intricate beauty the traces of the conflict to come which will shatter the false whole, unravel the city, and the state, altogether; the soldiers marching the streets in those distinctive helmets which will march across Europe, the Jews walking freely, the children who in 15 years or so will be herding those same Jews into the concentration camps. We can watch it, not as a snapshot of what has been, but as an uncanny, ghostly foreshadowing of what will be...
© Allan Thomas 2000
Endnotes:
(1) Grierson, John. 'First Principles of Documentary', in Kevin Macdonald & Mark Cousins (eds.) Imagining Reality: The Faber Book of Documentary. London: Faber and Faber, 1996
(2) Interestingly, in the print I've been watching, there is no shower of rain in the afternoon, although the streets of the city are certainly wet with rain in the final, evening shots of the film. Is it possible Grierson is conflating Berlin with Joris Ivens' Rain (Regen) (1929)? Rain is certainly in a similar mode to Berlin (although it is more 'a day in the life of rain', than of a city), and there is an afternoon shower featured in it which matches Grierson's description.
(3) Grierson, opcit., p 100
(4) This argument is adapted from one Gilles Deleuze makes with regard to a comparison between Eisenstein and Griffith, where Griffith's use of parallel alternating montage suggests a unity of disparate elements, whereas Eisenstein's montage of opposition opposes those elements dialectically to produce a unity at a higher level of explanation, in a third shot. This higher level of explanation is, as Deleuze points out, that of social exploitation. See Deleuze, Gilles: Cinema 1: The Movement Image (trans. by Hugh Tomlinson and Barbara Habberjam), Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 1986, pp30-33
You may be interested in Allan James Thomas's 2000 essay.
Berlin: Symphony of a City
by
Allan James Thomas
Berlin: Symphony of a City (Berlin: die Sinfonie der Großstadt)
(1927, Germany, 50 mins, B&W, silent)
How to watch a film like Berlin: Symphony of a City, seventy-three years after it was made? The obvious temptation is to view it as an historical document, an insight into the patterns of life and living in Berlin in the late '20s - certainly the film lends itself to such a viewing. It offers us a literal 'day in the life of', bringing us into Berlin by train as the sun rises, and following the life of the city as it wakes, goes to work through the morning and into the afternoon, moves from work to play, to sport and dancing and drinking deep into the night. It leaps swiftly from rich to poor, from man to machine and back again, from the grandeur of the city-scape to the sewers beneath, and always movement, movement in every way that can be found. Trains, trams, horses, bustling crowds, spinning wheels and fairground rides, boat races, horse races, dog races, dancing and pounding machines, always we see the dynamism of a city in motion. It is an extraordinarily beautiful film, and its distance from us in time and in experience only emphasises that beauty. Like a carved miniature, it offers us a model of Berlin brought close and intimate, and yet viewed from across an unbridgeable gap.
At least part of this gap is a consequence of the sheer aestheticism of the film itself; we see its beauty before we see anything else. Documentary makers from John Grierson to Jean Rouch and beyond have warned of the dangers of the beautiful image within documentary film. In an article written in the mid '30s (1), Grierson picks out Berlin in particular as an example of what documentary should not be. Despite the beauty and power of its images, and the dynamism of its editing (which he acknowledges), for Grierson, Berlin ultimately fails to show us anything of any import:
For all its ado of workmen and factories and swirl and swing of a great city, Berlin created nothing. Or if it created something, it was that shower of rain in the afternoon(2). The people of the city got up splendidly, they tumbled through their five million hoops impressively, they turned in; and no other issue of God or man emerged than that sudden besmattering spilling of wet on people and pavements.(3)
In its emphasis on the beautiful and the visually dramatic to the exclusion of any 'issue' as such (unemployment for instance), the film, for Grierson at least, shirks its social responsibilities; we come out no better informed or educated than we were before.
Is this a fair critique of the film? Certainly there would seem to be at least the seeds of political analysis at work in Berlin, in its constant juxtaposition of the everyday life of the worker and that of the wealthy elite. It's certainly tempting to read such comparisons as illustrations of the unfair consequences of an unequal distribution of wealth. In some cases the contrasts and analogies drawn through editing resemble something one might see in a film by Eisenstein or Vertov; for example, a series of shots of rich and poor at their respective lunches are interspersed with shots of lions tearing up a leg of raw meat. One could easily imagine an Eisenstein forming a metaphorical juxtaposition with these shots suggesting that the rich devour the poor like ravenous lions.
However, although the linking of the scenes does seem to suggest that an analogy or metaphor is being drawn, it is ambiguous whether it is the poor or the rich who are being compared to a ravenous lion. Indeed, it seems that if there is a point being made, it is that rich and poor are all the same in their primal needs and desires. What it shows us is not the contrast between the conditions of rich and poor, but their basic similarity. For all of the juxtapositions of rich and poor and their respective lifestyles we find in Berlin, the ultimate effect is not to oppose the two in a dialectic of class struggle, but to suggest their ultimate unity as differentiated parts unified by their common membership of the same organic whole, that is to say, Berlin itself (4). One cannot agree with Grierson when he argues that Berlin shows us nothing, that it is purely an aesthetic experience; it offers us a dynamic expression of the city in motion, the interaction of its parts as they make up the whole that is Berlin.
The problem is that the Berlin if offers us is a profoundly ahistorical one; by subsuming any conflict between its opposing elements to their ultimate unity as part of the whole, it suggests that ultimately there can be no change. The parts that make it up can come and go, but Berlin will always be Berlin. If, from where we are now, we can view it 'historically', it is not because it offers us a snapshot of a time passed; it offers us no more than a false unity, forged by the subsumption of difference (class, race, religion, politics) to the apparent unity of the whole. Like the carved miniature I evoked earlier, it holds us at a distance, the better to appreciate it's intricate beauty. If we see 'history' in the film, viewing it seventy-three years later, it is because we see in that intricate beauty the traces of the conflict to come which will shatter the false whole, unravel the city, and the state, altogether; the soldiers marching the streets in those distinctive helmets which will march across Europe, the Jews walking freely, the children who in 15 years or so will be herding those same Jews into the concentration camps. We can watch it, not as a snapshot of what has been, but as an uncanny, ghostly foreshadowing of what will be...
© Allan Thomas 2000
Endnotes:
(1) Grierson, John. 'First Principles of Documentary', in Kevin Macdonald & Mark Cousins (eds.) Imagining Reality: The Faber Book of Documentary. London: Faber and Faber, 1996
(2) Interestingly, in the print I've been watching, there is no shower of rain in the afternoon, although the streets of the city are certainly wet with rain in the final, evening shots of the film. Is it possible Grierson is conflating Berlin with Joris Ivens' Rain (Regen) (1929)? Rain is certainly in a similar mode to Berlin (although it is more 'a day in the life of rain', than of a city), and there is an afternoon shower featured in it which matches Grierson's description.
(3) Grierson, opcit., p 100
(4) This argument is adapted from one Gilles Deleuze makes with regard to a comparison between Eisenstein and Griffith, where Griffith's use of parallel alternating montage suggests a unity of disparate elements, whereas Eisenstein's montage of opposition opposes those elements dialectically to produce a unity at a higher level of explanation, in a third shot. This higher level of explanation is, as Deleuze points out, that of social exploitation. See Deleuze, Gilles: Cinema 1: The Movement Image (trans. by Hugh Tomlinson and Barbara Habberjam), Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 1986, pp30-33
Reviewer:
Wickson
-
favoritefavoritefavoritefavorite -
September 8, 2009
Subject: Late Silent Cinema of Attractions
Subject: Late Silent Cinema of Attractions
I have a hunch that the band Kraftwerk were inspired by this film as Kraftwerkian themes from bicycles to showroom dummies are depicted here.
Seriously though, on the subject of music, it was common practice to have live music performed during screenings. Silent films were seldom shown in silence. The upload should have some music here.
The film was created during the latter part of the silent era and is in a way a throw back to an earlier pre-narrative type of cinema often called "primitive cinema" or "cinema of attractions." By the time of this film, nocturnal cinematography had become sufficiently advanced to give us the thrilling depictions of Berlin night life.
Recommended for those interested in German history especially for those interested in the "Golden Twenties"
Seriously though, on the subject of music, it was common practice to have live music performed during screenings. Silent films were seldom shown in silence. The upload should have some music here.
The film was created during the latter part of the silent era and is in a way a throw back to an earlier pre-narrative type of cinema often called "primitive cinema" or "cinema of attractions." By the time of this film, nocturnal cinematography had become sufficiently advanced to give us the thrilling depictions of Berlin night life.
Recommended for those interested in German history especially for those interested in the "Golden Twenties"
Reviewer:
Stachelkaktus
-
favoritefavoritefavoritefavorite -
September 29, 2006 (edited)
Subject: Klassiker des deutschen Stummfilms
Subject: Klassiker des deutschen Stummfilms
Berlin: Die Sinfonie der GroÃstadt ist ein Schwarz-WeiÃ-Stummfilm, der 1927 unter der Regie von Walter Ruttmann gedreht wurde. Er hat eine Länge von 65 Minuten.
Der dokumentarische Film beschreibt einen Tag in der GroÃstadt Berlin, die in den 20er Jahren einen industriellen Aufschwung erlebte, und gibt auch heute noch einen Einblick in die Lebens- und Arbeitsverhältnisse zu dieser Zeit
Der dokumentarische Film beschreibt einen Tag in der GroÃstadt Berlin, die in den 20er Jahren einen industriellen Aufschwung erlebte, und gibt auch heute noch einen Einblick in die Lebens- und Arbeitsverhältnisse zu dieser Zeit
Reviewer:
Peter Haas, Il Mare Film
-
favoritefavoritefavoritefavoritefavorite -
May 23, 2006
Subject: Amazing Document of Berlin in the 20s
Subject: Amazing Document of Berlin in the 20s
This film is a jewel as it shows Berlin in the 20s. No voice-over, only few commentary, but lots of everyday shots. Amazing.
There are 11 reviews for this item. .
263,633 Views
227 Favorites
DOWNLOAD OPTIONS
IN COLLECTIONS
Silent Films Feature Films MoviesUploaded by Mozarteus on